02 May 2012


The Olympic Games in London starts in less than 100 days, and the UK national handball teams are ready to show Great Britain what handball is.
The 39-year-old Jesper Holmris started coaching Great Britain's women handball team in 2008, and is now focusing on the 2012 London Olympics this summer.
The Dane started to coach the team, with a bit of luck as he was coaching the Danish league club Århus and therefore trained next to the Great Britain’s players, but with great enthusiasm in 2008 after hearing the word Olympics.

Holmris: ”I took the job because the players were so motivated, the project was ambitious and because the target was the Olympics.

“The Olympics is something that drags everyone into it, including me.”

Back in 2005 London was nominated to host the 2012 Olympics, it was not just a matter of hosting the big event, but also performing in every sport hosted.

In 2006, UK Sport decided to start up the exciting project of Great Britain's first national handball team.

Kelsi Fairbrother was one of the first three to join the GB women´s national team in 2006 and she is now one of the best players on the team.

Fairbrother: “This is the first British handball squad to go to any Olympics and it has been pretty intense for most of us.”

In 2007, GB hosted a real 'Great Britain's Got Talent', looking for great sports people to attend the Olympics. Around 5000 people turned up for the audition, and the women´s handball team ended up with 120 girls going for the trials.

UK Sport made an agreement with the Danish sports college, Århus Højskole, to have the entire Great Britain handball team, both men and women, to live and to play in Denmark. A few of the girls turned down this opportunity because they wouldn’t leave family behind or they were too young to drop out of school.

They ended up with 12 women players living and playing full-time handball in Denmark. The first ever national match was played in 2007 and a few more games followed that year.

Holmris: “The reason why UK Sport made an agreement in Denmark in the first place was because Denmark has one of the best handball leagues in the world and it would be natural to play in a country where everybody loves to play and watch the sport.”

When Holmris became national coach in 2008 he came up with the idea to find English citizen or half-English citizens in other countries, who had any background with playing handball.

He soon discovered more talented handball girls, with either a mum or dad being British. They also discovered that some of the great women basketball players, rugby players and netball players were great at handball, and head hunted some of them.

They continued establishing the handball squad and the team got to play a few games against smaller countries in 2008. They also managed to win two games against Estonia and The Faroe Islands.

But in 2009 when the great money depression started, UK Sport had to cut back on the funding for the handball project. Most players went on to different countries. Some of them managed to get a contract in Denmark like Fairbrother, and others moved to Norway, Germany and Italy.

Fairbrother: “I never dreamt that I would be given an opportunity to play in such a good league, but I have and I feel right at home. That is the best way I can describe it.

“The people of Denmark love handball as much as I do, and to play something you love as a full-time job is a great feeling.”

Since April last year, eighteen girls have settled at a British training base at Crystal Palace in South London. With the exception of three players, who are playing at a club team level, that is the entire team. One of them is Fairbrother who plays for the Danish team; Esbjerg.

Fairbrother: “I was offered a contract with Esbjerg; one of the top teams, in the best league in the world for women. So I felt that it could only be positive for me and my national team to stay and train and play at such high standards every day.”

Holmris admits that Fairbrother is a success story and hopes she is not the last one.

“Kelsi (Fairbrother) is a special case. She went from nothing, to playing in the best league in the world in only four years.

“If we could find Kelsi and turn her into such a success, there are many other British handball players out there we could find and make part of our team.”

The rest of the girls at Crystal Palace train twice a day and the Danish head Coach are pleased with the agreement.

“The facilities we have down here are fantastic. We often get to play in the Olympics arena, because they are testing the event for the upcoming Olympics.”

But London 2012 is not all they are training for, the team are looking forward to events following the Olympics, and are hoping to continue their development.

Holmris: “We will not achieve much in 2012, at most perhaps a quarter-final, but hopefully we will be playing at the 2016 Olympics where we should be able to make ourselves noticed.

“If you look at what we have gained in just four years it's incredible. We started from nothing. I think it is impressive how much we have achieved. Think about how good we could be in another four to eight years!”

The British Handball Association, the players and the handball fans are all hoping that handball will grow to become one of the great sports in the UK. But before this can happen, the facilities must be improved and the UK needs more coaches and referees to obtain this.

“Looking back at France, one of the greatest handball nations, they did not have any handball 15-20 years ago,” explains Holmris.

He is hoping to see the same development in Great Britain.




28 February 2012

The Danish swimming Olympic hope

Jakob Andkjær
Photo: Niels Christian Jung © DR Sporten
Jacob Andkjær aims to make the Olympics and is currently with the other Danish swimmers training more and harder.

Said Danish Swimming Union Elite Chef Lars Sorensen. “Jacob's big goal is to qualify for the individual 100 meters free at the Olympics in London. It will be difficult, and it is a tremendous challenge, but he delivers a good result every day at training.”


Jacob Andkjær himself even knows that it will be a hard task and it will not be easy to qualify for the Olympic Games:

“There are a couple of months before the qualification, and right now I feel it is going uphill. But I will be better and hopefully be able to swim more efficiently in the next few months.”

Qualifying takes place in Bellahøj, Denmark from the 22nd to the 25th of March 2012 and swimmers who achieved times during the Olympic requirements, qualify directly to the Olympics.

America to home country Denmark
About a year ago Andkjær returned to Denmark after spending five years at an American college, where
he had top training facilities. He has improved and gained better time on the short lanes.

Now he has changed the American training environment to the Danish, and he believes that it takes time to accustom the body to the Danish facilities and the hard training.

Said Andkjær: “It has taken a while to get the body used to being back home again. Here in Denmark we train more in cardio workout, so that means we must swim longer and harder at every training.
I'm still building up the mold and I am very tired at the moment.”

The 26-year-old swimmer was in the Olympics in Beijing in 2008, where he ended up at 19th place.

Lars Sorensen believes it can succeed for him, and we will see him swim for Denmark at the Olympics in London:

“He is highly motivated and give it his all at every workout. His first hurdle is the Danish Open (Qualifying Event), and it is not certain that he'll make it.
There's always a risk, and where there is a risk there is a chance.”

National Team Coach Paulus Wildeboer thinks that there is still a long way for the Danish fighter.



Said Wildeboer: “He has an extreme talent, but time is running out. He is not the youngest swimmer anymore, and it costs more energy for the body to recover. But Jacob is still very keen to learn and get better. Mentally he is strong enough, but it will take a lot for him physically to qualify for Olympics.”

18 February 2012

Blog - Another failure by Caroline Wozniacki – the Polish girl!

When they do not achieve Grand Slam titles or major wins, fans say Andy Murray is Scottish and Caroline Wozniacki is Polish.
At any other time, like when Wozniacki became the best player in the world, she is DANISH. When Murray is doing well, he is British.
Wozniacki has Polish parents, and Danes can disown her when she is not winning. And that’s the problem with dual nationality - It can be both a blessing and a curse.
But in Wozniakci’s case, neither Danes nor Poles seem to want her right now.
And, after recently firing her Spanish coach Ricardo Sanchez – the man who was supposed to bring her a major title, after just two months the question is where does she go from here?
Back in 2005, when she made her professional debut just eight days after her 15th birthday, people thought she was going be bigger than the William sisters - the next big thing in women tennis.
She made the US open final in 2009, became world number one in October 2010 without a Grand Slam win and hasn’t featured in a Grand Slam final since.
After losing in the quarter final at the Australian Open to Kim Clijsters in January, and losing her position as number one, she fired Sanchez.
Her relationship with her father and coach Piotr, has come under scrutiny.
He was her mentor when she began playing aged seven, but many said he was not a good enough coach and she needed professional help to step up her career.
Yet it seems three was a crowd. Wozniacki herself has said it feels more ‘cosy’ not to have too many people around her.
But it’s time for the hiring and firing to stop and the winning to begin. Wozniacki needs to show the world there was a reason why she became number one. She needs to show the desire to get back there again.
She needs to wake up and realize that she is idling. And her father needs to realise she has now grown up.
As Sanchez said after he was fired:: “It is impossible to be part of a system with two coaches and Caroline only got confused.”
He is so right! Since Wozniacki turned pro, her father has always been there and still makes all her decisions as if she is still a 14-year-old. Both player and father/coach need to move on.
Her most recent tournament was a disaster. She lost in the second round in Qatar to the unseeded Lucie Safarova from Czech Republic.
She said afterwards the defeat that she just needed to fight better in the next match. But she has said that for over a year now. When will it happen? She needs to wake up, and not just watch her world ranking fall.
She should do something drastic and hire a new trainer. She needs a better coach than her father!
Many of the top 10 women tennis players have had their father as coach, but not after achieving a top 10 on the world ranking. Wozniacki you should learn from them.
She cannot remain world number one without winning a Grand Slam.
In 2008, at the Beijing Olympics, she said: “I will be the world’s best female tennis player.”
She complains about negativity from fans and tennis critics, but she has brought it upon herself. She needs a Grand Slam, but is she willing to make the sacrifices necessary?
Coming from a high-profile family where her father used to play professional football, and a brother currently playing in the Danish league, she should know about media attention.
She may not be the Danish tennis darling she used to be, but many people in Denmark, including myself, still believe in her.
She can and will do it. The question is – when?

23 January 2012

Another Dane qualified for London2012

On Friday the 27th January 2012 is exactly half years for the Olympics in London begins and another Dane can begin to enjoy a little extra. The trampoline jumper Peter Jensen, who has qualified for the Olympics, can be well excited.


Rights: Scanpix, photographer: Adrian Dennis.
 
Peter Jensen was at an Olympic Games qualifier program qualification in trampoline for London 2012. Jensen has previously been involved in the Olympics in both 2004 and 2008 where he represented Denmark.

The 31-year-old Copenhagener who normally jumps in Copenhagen Trampoline Club, is right now finishing his master degree in sport-science. Jensen aims to complete it in April, when he starts to train full time towards the Olympics.

When Peter Jensen qualified for the Olympics in London 2012, 13 January this year, he tested the conditions for Olympics.

Qualifying took place in the O2 Arena (North Greenwich Arena) in England's capital, which is also where all gymnastics disciplines will be hold during the legend.

Gymnastics has three different disciplines in the Olympics, gymnastics, rhythmic gymnastics and trampoline. Trampoline was introduced in Olympics program in Sydney in 2000.

Trampoline jumping will be held over two days in North Greenwich. When trampoline starts, there will be sit a panel of judges, who award the jumpers with points from 1-10. The gymnasts will be judged on how nice and correct the jumps are.

Denmark has never won a medal in trampoline and last time Denmark won a medal in gymnastics was the 1916th

29 December 2011

Rowing – Only for skinny men?!

For London 2012, the Rowing competition will be held on the spectacular lake: Eton Dorney. Rowing has been staged at every Games since making its debut at the Olympics programme in Paris in 1900.

In London there will be 550 rowers competing for 14 medal events, 353 men and 197 women. Watch a clip of rowing London 2012.
The Olympic Rowing events have eight types of boats and it range from the Single Sculls, featuring solo rowers, to the Eights, contested by teams of eight rowers plus a cox.

The Vikings have always gained great results in rowing, which makes sense as Denmark holds the sea all around it. It started back in 1912 with winning gold and the latest result were bronze in 2008, of course there have been some years where we did not achieved any medals.
A Danish Viking ship
Eight Danes has already obtained a qualification for the 2012 Olympics. The last six rowers waiting will be decided at the Olympics qualification takes place in Switzerland the 20th- 23th of May.




Eskild Ebbesen sitting across the bar from me with his medal in 2008

For me the most interesting and successful rower is the 39-year-old Eskild Ebbesen. Checkout his own website..
Ebbesen has attended the Olympics in 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, all of them was at the four person rowers ´guld firen.´ He is also the only person who has been in the boat since 1996. Three of the Olympics gave gold but in year 2000 they only received bronze. The four-rower, is already qualified for the 2012.







The four sculls competition

The other rowers all fighting for seats on the boat with Ebbesen over the winter are:

- Morten Jørgensen (Olympics-gold 2008, overall world cup winner and World Cup silver 2009)

- Kasper Winther Jørgensen (overall World Cup winner and World Cup silver 2009)

- Jens Vilhelmsen (overall World Cup winner and World Cup silver 2009)

- Christian Place Pedersen (overall World Cup winner and World Cup silver 2009)

- Jacob Barsøe (won the European championship silver with the Eight sculls in 2010)


The two female rowers Juliane Elander Rasmussen and Anne Lolk Thomsen qualified to the Olympics in September 2011 at the world championship in a doubles sculls.

Good luck to the rest of our rowers in Switzerland in May 2012!!
Me kissing the four Sculls gold medal